Reto,
Very nice and interesting CMS. I have a simular idea; although, it isn't a
server side app. What does WYMIWYG stand for? What You Make Is What You Get?
> If I understand http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-concepts/#dfn-URI-reference
> correctly, the following graph contains two statements :
> <snip>
Yes. Even if they were the same URIs, though, there would _still be two
statements_! They would just be duplicates, but that is allowed in RDF's data
model.
> Does it make sense that "Two RDF URI references are equal if and only if
> they compare as equal, character by character, as Unicode strings.",
Yes. That is correct.
> wouldn't it cause less problems to say "Two RDF URI references are equal
> if and only if the resolve to the same URI".
The problem is that two RDF URI references don't have to "resolve" to anything!
They could point to a resource that is not network retrievable, for example.
For this reason, I think the tag URI scheme is a good idea for most URIs. See
<http://taguri.org> for more info on that scheme.
> I'm asking because I'm implementing and RDF based CMS [1] where GET and
> MGET requests are answered according of the properties the requested
> resource has in the model and I have no way to find out whether the user
> requested http://gmuer.ch/%C3%BC or http://example.org/&#65533;&#65533;.
Take a look at the SPARQL protocol, which provides a standard way of using HTTP
to get RDF information. See <http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-protocol/> for
more information.
--
Jimmy Cerra
https://nemo.dev.java.net
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